Matt:

Hello and welcome to the eCommerce Podcast with

Matt:

me, your host, Matt Edmundson.

Matt:

Now the eCommerce podcast It is a show all about helping you deliver eCommerce wow.

Matt:

And to help us do just that, we have a very special guest today, Sarah Williams,

Matt:

all the way from the other side of the water all the way from launch your box.

Matt:

We're going to be talking about everything to do with subscription businesses.

Matt:

Oh yes, and Sarah knows everything there is to know about it.

Matt:

No pressure, Sarah, but the stakes are high.

Matt:

Before we get into that though, let me just tell you welcome to the show.

Matt:

If this is your first time with us, great to have you.

Matt:

Great that you could join us.

Matt:

If you haven't done so already, check out the website ecommercepodcast.

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net where coincidentally you can sign up to the newsletter and all of the notes

Matt:

and the links from our amazing guests like Sarah come straight to your inbox.

Matt:

Automagically.

Matt:

Yes, they do.

Matt:

And you can click through, you can connect with them.

Matt:

You can see what they're up to.

Matt:

It's awesome.

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So check it out, ecommercepodcast.

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net.

Matt:

And of course, this show is brought to you by the wonderful eCommerce Cohort.

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eCommerce Cohort is a monthly eCommerce membership group that you could be

Matt:

a part of if you're not already.

Matt:

Why not come and join us?

Matt:

There's some great stuff in there.

Matt:

We have expert workshops delivered every month by eCommerce experts.

Matt:

Plus, that's not enough.

Matt:

You get to join in the live recordings of this podcast.

Matt:

Oh yes, so you can ask questions direct to the guests yourself.

Matt:

Ah, come check it out, eCommercecohort.

Matt:

com, be great to see you in there.

Matt:

And before we get into it, let me give a big shout out to Subsummit,

Matt:

which is where Sarah and I collided for want of a better expression.

Matt:

If you haven't checked it out already, check out Subsummit.

Matt:

com, Subsummit24, I will be there.

Matt:

It's a great place.

Matt:

Are you going to be there, Sarah?

Sarah:

I am going to be there.

Matt:

That was a yes, I should have put a sound up, sorry.

Matt:

Yeah, she said yes.

Matt:

Ha.

Matt:

Schoolboy era.

Matt:

Ask a question, make sure you turn up the volume.

Matt:

Now, let's talk about Sarah.

Matt:

Starting with a quaint brick and mortar store, Sarah quickly pivoted

Matt:

to revolutionize the subscription box world in 2017 with Launch Your Box.

Matt:

Her dedication to exceptional customer experiences has turned her venture

Matt:

into a multi million dollar success.

Matt:

Beyond running her thriving business, Sarah empowers other entrepreneurs through

Matt:

her programs and shares her journey through her debut book, One Box at a Time.

Matt:

We're going to get into that.

Matt:

And actually, Sarah, it's also fair to say you have your own podcast.

Matt:

You are a seasoned podcaster, aren't you?

Matt:

With your Launcher Box podcast.

Sarah:

Yes, I love the podcast.

Matt:

Did you enjoy doing it?

Matt:

Do you enjoy getting the guests on and chatting away?

Sarah:

It's one of my favorite things that I get to do, the podcast.

Sarah:

I love it.

Matt:

yeah, I'm with you.

Matt:

You just get to speak to some incredible people, don't you, and you just have some

Matt:

fun doing it and learn a lot along the way and you don't necessarily have reasons

Matt:

for it, it's just that I enjoy chatting to people and it's a wonderful thing to do.

Matt:

Thank you for joining us.

Matt:

Thank you for being here.

Sarah:

I'm really excited to be here today with you guys.

Matt:

Yeah, in the midst of, because at the time of recording, let's just say

Matt:

It's a busy time of the year, isn't it?

Sarah:

It's slightly busy in the fall, just a tad.

Sarah:

If I were to pan this screen over and you were to look at my warehouse

Sarah:

right now, it would be a shocker.

Matt:

Yeah, mayhem and chaos would be the the order of the

Matt:

day, no, which is fair enough.

Matt:

It's fair enough.

Matt:

Tell us about the subscription business that you've got, The Frame

Matt:

by Sarah what's going on with that?

Matt:

Just to give us some fram framework.

Sarah:

Yeah, so I started the business as a kind of a add on

Sarah:

to my brick and mortar business.

Sarah:

So I had a personalized gift shop that was just a local brick and mortar shop.

Sarah:

And in 2017, I decided I wanted to have a subscription box as a way

Sarah:

to take that local customer and make them the VIP of my business.

Sarah:

And so I started this subscription box.

Sarah:

It's called the Monogram Box because my brick and mortar,

Sarah:

we personalize everything.

Sarah:

So we do the same thing in the subscription box, which you

Sarah:

could say is a little challenging because every single box that

Sarah:

goes out this floor is customized.

Sarah:

And so that's what makes our subscription unique and special is that it's customized

Sarah:

for the subscriber every single month.

Sarah:

And we pride ourselves on that.

Sarah:

Than that.

Sarah:

We love that.

Sarah:

And our subscribers really love it.

Sarah:

So we started that in 2017 with 44 subscribers.

Sarah:

And we ship out thousands of boxes every single month now.

Sarah:

And it's just been a great journey.

Sarah:

It's been a great journey.

Matt:

Fantastic.

Matt:

So you basically thought, I want to start a subscription business.

Matt:

What is the single way to make it way more complicated and

Matt:

way more difficult to myself?

Matt:

Let's do that.

Sarah:

Absolutely.

Sarah:

If I can go back and tell myself, till 2017, Sarah, what I know now,

Sarah:

I would say Stop it right now.

Sarah:

You, that is not.

Sarah:

Scalable.

Sarah:

What are you doing?

Sarah:

You're going to kill yourself through this process.

Sarah:

But no, I just took it as a challenge.

Sarah:

Cause in my mind, I didn't think I was going to have this multimillion dollar

Sarah:

subscription box business in mind.

Sarah:

I really just would really love a hundred subscribers because at

Sarah:

that time, a hundred subscribers.

Sarah:

Would have paid my monthly overhead for my brick and mortar.

Sarah:

And that was the goal.

Sarah:

That was like my big goal.

Sarah:

If I got a hundred subscribers, my rent, my utilities, and my

Sarah:

one employee would be paid for.

Sarah:

And then everything I made in the brick and mortar, all the

Sarah:

profit I made in the brick and mortar would just be extra on top.

Sarah:

So the goal, when I started this subscription box was just to bring some

Sarah:

stability into my overhead expenses.

Sarah:

And and I never imagined that it was going to explode to what it is today.

Matt:

So does, is the Brick and Mortar business still running

Matt:

or is it purely online now?

Matt:

Sure.

Sarah:

So in December of 2020 after COVID showed me that I didn't need

Sarah:

the brick and mortar to be successful.

Sarah:

I went all, I went online in 2020.

Sarah:

The only thing I really had online before was my subscription box.

Sarah:

I was still very local.

Sarah:

When COVID shut down my brick and mortar store, I pivoted and put everything online

Sarah:

in that panic of what am I going to do?

Sarah:

And that showed me that I could reach a lot more people.

Sarah:

And that my local customer base, cause it was huge.

Sarah:

It was probably at that time 70 percent of my business was my local cover

Sarah:

customer base And it was also about 70 percent of my subscriber base,

Sarah:

too So I felt like to be relevant to those people I still needed to have my

Sarah:

local brick and mortar store But when I got shut down and we went online.

Sarah:

Everything exploded and I no longer fit that brick and mortar,

Sarah:

like I needed bigger space, I needed more shipping capabilities.

Sarah:

I needed more fulfillment capabilities.

Sarah:

I could no longer do this in the back room of my brick and mortar store.

Sarah:

So in December of that year, we moved to a warehouse with the intention

Sarah:

that I was gonna go all online.

Sarah:

I shut down the brick and mortar store and we were just going to focus online.

Sarah:

But during that transition, something kept tugging at me, this local customer

Sarah:

base that I had hundreds of people walking around my town in the same t

Sarah:

shirt that I've designed for the month.

Sarah:

And it was almost like this disconnect for me.

Sarah:

To not be able to see them, to not be able to help them in person, to not be

Sarah:

able to get their feedback that I had all gotten from my brick and mortar.

Sarah:

So when we opened our warehouse and closed the brick and mortar, we took the

Sarah:

front 12 feet all the way across of our warehouse and we made a faux retail store.

Sarah:

So that our customer Could walk into our warehouse.

Sarah:

It feels like a boutique in the front.

Sarah:

And we are able, they're able to shop and pick up orders and

Sarah:

pick up their subscription boxes and have interaction with us.

Sarah:

Now we are only open during our warehouse hours, so we aren't

Sarah:

keeping boutique hours anymore.

Sarah:

But it was the hybrid.

Sarah:

It was.

Sarah:

Still have a personal connection with our local subscribers.

Sarah:

They can still feel like they can come in and see us and talk to us.

Sarah:

And, but yet we're in a warehouse environment so that we can

Sarah:

continue to fulfill and ship in the capacity that we needed to.

Matt:

That's really interesting.

Matt:

I've seen this actually a lot.

Matt:

More, certainly more recently where businesses went pure warehouse the

Matt:

dingy warehouse, but actually some of the warehouse locations are quite.

Matt:

Are quite handy, aren't they?

Matt:

They can be quite helpful.

Matt:

And so I've now seen a lot of warehouses, put stores in shop fronts.

Matt:

There's actually a big chain in the UK called Screw Fix, which build an entire

Matt:

business out of this like a DIY store.

Matt:

So there's no shop to go shopping around.

Matt:

You buy everything through a catalog, you go pick it up.

Matt:

But a friend of mine who runs an online tool business has done the

Matt:

same thing, massive warehouse selling power tools, which is just beautiful.

Matt:

I love to walk around it.

Matt:

But he has this amazing sort of store at the front and you would

Matt:

never know what's behind that wall.

Matt:

And so I'm really intrigued.

Matt:

The hybrid model seems to be working.

Matt:

'cause you've got the warehouse space, right?

Matt:

The staff are already there.

Matt:

So the staff can be doing picking and packing and customer service inquiries.

Matt:

I suppose you've got to fit it out, but is there any real massive extra overhead?

Matt:

I doubt there probably is really, so is it working well for you?

Sarah:

It's working very well and we can see say, subscriber pickup day,

Sarah:

like when we have our boxes ready to ship out and we send out a text for

Sarah:

our local subscribers and it's pickup day you're going to see a huge increase

Sarah:

in sales of in store sales that day.

Sarah:

They're coming through your front door, they're walking by all those display

Sarah:

pieces that you have out, the mannequins, the sale tables, whatever you have out.

Sarah:

They may have seen me on a Facebook Live selling a cardigan that goes

Sarah:

with the t shirt that's in the box.

Sarah:

And they're like, I want to see that cardigan that Sarah

Sarah:

was showing us the other day.

Sarah:

They're here.

Sarah:

They can try it on.

Sarah:

And they're leaving with more purchases than just their monogram

Sarah:

box that they came to pick up.

Sarah:

So it's, it's like It's not like Walmart pickup, they bring it to your car,

Sarah:

you're never walking by the aisles, but you're going to pick things up if you

Sarah:

do go walk in and pick up your items.

Sarah:

And that's really what we've done here is we've created kind of the impulse

Sarah:

when people are picking up their orders, but it also gives them the

Sarah:

ability to connect with us in person.

Sarah:

And that is so important.

Sarah:

And that's what people miss.

Sarah:

When they go from having a brick and mortar to all online, they're

Sarah:

missing that connection, which makes our customers super loyal to us.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

No, it's very clever.

Matt:

Very smart idea.

Matt:

But a thing that you mentioned there, Sarah, that I want to pick up

Matt:

on is you do the subscription box, the, the personalized stuff in the

Matt:

subscription box, but you just said are we, they may have seen me on a

Matt:

Facebook live selling a cardigan, which will go with the t shirt in.

Matt:

So it's there's more to this story than just putting stuff

Matt:

in a box and shipping out.

Matt:

It sounds

Sarah:

absolutely.

Sarah:

Absolutely.

Sarah:

And these are just, I call it expansion revenue.

Sarah:

So we have a solid revenue structure with our subscription box and it is 75 percent

Sarah:

of our overall revenue, our subscriptions.

Sarah:

Which is amazing because we can count on that every single month.

Sarah:

It's not like we have to show up and sell to pay the bills.

Sarah:

We know 75 percent of our revenue is reoccurring.

Sarah:

It's going to hit our bank account every single month.

Sarah:

So the other 25 percent is our expansion revenue on our subscriber

Sarah:

base, on our subscription base.

Sarah:

So when I curate a box, I'm also curating pieces that could be great

Sarah:

add ons to the products in this box.

Sarah:

Example, there's a t shirt in every one of my subscriptions.

Sarah:

What are we going to wear with the t shirt every single month?

Sarah:

In the winter, we're going to wear cardigans.

Sarah:

In the summer, we're going to wear kimonos.

Sarah:

We might wear, earrings and hats and shorts and whatever

Sarah:

else that we want to curate.

Sarah:

That'll go with the subscription box because these are just ways that are

Sarah:

easily expandable on the current revenue that we're already have when I order

Sarah:

the stuff for the subscription boxes.

Sarah:

I don't have to worry too much about how much to order.

Sarah:

Is it going to sell?

Sarah:

Will I have to mark it down?

Sarah:

That stuff's already sold.

Sarah:

So when you think about a subscription box business, and I'm

Sarah:

ordering 100, 000 of this today, I already know that's going to sell.

Sarah:

sell.

Sarah:

There's no risk involved in it for me.

Sarah:

It's already sold whether I'm going to sell it next month or three

Sarah:

months from now, I'm ordering it.

Sarah:

It's sold.

Sarah:

So then I can add on to that with the stuff, but I don't have to be as

Sarah:

risky with it because I know all these subscribers are going to have this shirt.

Sarah:

And it's cold, so they're not going to want to wear a t shirt by

Sarah:

themselves in the month of December.

Sarah:

What can I'm going to order a navy cardigan, because I've

Sarah:

got navy ink on this shirt.

Sarah:

They're going, I'm going to pair it, I'm going to show up live, I'm going

Sarah:

to show them my navy earrings, I'm going to show them my navy cardigan,

Sarah:

I might have a cute crossbody purse that I have with this outfit.

Sarah:

Now I'm giving them the complete look, and they can choose whether they want more

Sarah:

than what they've got in their box or not.

Sarah:

So it's, what can I use to compliment the pieces that are

Sarah:

already sold and things like that.

Sarah:

So that's what I look at.

Sarah:

And when we're curating out a year's worth of boxes ahead of time, I can easily cure,

Sarah:

curate the collections that I want to sell in addition to that box that month.

Matt:

that's really powerful.

Matt:

And it's interesting.

Matt:

You, you, the stat that you gave 75 percent of your

Matt:

income is from subscription.

Matt:

25 percent is this expansion revenue.

Matt:

You called it, which is a great phrase.

Matt:

And that is, I think that's quite.

Matt:

Typical.

Matt:

Normally a sort of 70 30 ratio is what you can, is normally what with

Matt:

companies that have core hero products.

Matt:

And you go you can boost 30% by just by adding some cleverly chosen add-ons

Matt:

and upsells to this single product.

Matt:

And it seems that you are doing that.

Matt:

So another thing I appreciate you are just talking and I'm just thinking, wow.

Matt:

And I'm listening and I'm going, you mentioned Facebook Live now.

Matt:

Let's talk about this a second because you're obviously doing what is fast

Matt:

becoming nicknamed live shopping, right?

Matt:

And big in Asia not so massive here in the UK or in the States

Matt:

It's getting bigger certainly when you're doing apparel it seems What's

Matt:

your experience with live shopping?

Sarah:

So this is what happened when I decided to go online.

Sarah:

I was so local, Matt, that I was really having trouble connecting

Sarah:

with these now online customers that didn't know me, right?

Sarah:

So when someone walks into my shop, and especially in the beginning,

Sarah:

I was the person checking you out.

Sarah:

I was the person packing your box.

Sarah:

I was the person steaming the clothes to put on the racks.

Sarah:

That was me.

Sarah:

Call me and I got to know you that way.

Sarah:

So someone came into my shop.

Sarah:

I was the one greeting you.

Sarah:

I was the one checking you out.

Sarah:

I was the one asking about your family or whoever and that's how I got to know

Sarah:

my customers and that became such this I had this cult like following because

Sarah:

they knew if they came in the store, they were gonna see me and so they come in

Sarah:

to talk with me and look what I had new.

Sarah:

So when I went online, there was a disconnect of how could I connect

Sarah:

with all these people that didn't live in my town, that didn't know me.

Sarah:

And that, the realization for me was like, I need to go live.

Sarah:

I'm, I need them to get to know me the same way my local customers

Sarah:

got to know me, because that's what's driving my business.

Sarah:

It's that return customer, it's that loyalty factor.

Sarah:

It's that no lis no and trust factor, and people on the

Sarah:

internet don't even know who I am.

Sarah:

And why would they come back?

Sarah:

Why would they?

Sarah:

Why would they shop with me when there's a million places to shop?

Sarah:

So I had to differentiate myself and I did that with live selling.

Sarah:

And I was very uncomfortable with it in the beginning.

Sarah:

I didn't want to do it.

Sarah:

I fought it at every turn.

Sarah:

I tried everything else.

Sarah:

I spent a lot of money on ads so I wouldn't have to do it.

Sarah:

I was like, I'll just do more ad dollars.

Sarah:

I'll just do this.

Sarah:

And I finally just realized like, okay, suck it up.

Sarah:

You're going to have to do this if you want to grow your business.

Sarah:

So we have to make a plan for this because I'm a structured person.

Sarah:

If I can make a plan with some structure that all I have to do is just keep

Sarah:

implementing, like I'm more likely to do it than just spontaneously.

Sarah:

So created a live structure, showed up live.

Sarah:

Very uncomfortable.

Sarah:

No one was there.

Sarah:

I begged my three friends to come live and ask me questions, ask me about the shirt

Sarah:

I'm wearing, ask me about the earrings, ask me how you can be a subscriber.

Sarah:

It's because I needed some kind of conversation because it was just me

Sarah:

and the screen and nobody was there.

Sarah:

And I did that for weeks.

Sarah:

And I just got better at it and better at it.

Sarah:

So once a week I would go live and then there was this one Saturday that

Sarah:

I went live and I was like, people that I didn't know watching, I was

Sarah:

like, Oh, there's people other than my mom and my friends watching me.

Sarah:

And then all of a sudden I could see there was a hundred viewers and

Sarah:

I panicked and I finished my life.

Sarah:

I was like, there's a hundred people watching me right now.

Sarah:

What is happening?

Sarah:

And so I panicked and I turned off the live, but I went again.

Sarah:

I went live again the next week.

Sarah:

And then I started having people buy that I didn't know that weren't from my town.

Sarah:

And I was like, all right, this is working.

Sarah:

We're going to keep showing up.

Sarah:

We're going to keep just being me because they're relating to me.

Sarah:

I would pick five or six things around the shop.

Sarah:

These are my favorite things of the week.

Sarah:

Let me show you this tumbler.

Sarah:

Let me show you these earrings.

Sarah:

Let me show you this bracelet.

Sarah:

Let me show you how you can pair these together with a cute sweatshirt.

Sarah:

Whatever it was.

Sarah:

And I would talk, I would tell little stories about my kids, or my day, or how

Sarah:

I spilt coffee all over myself on the way to work, or just things that were

Sarah:

relatable to the moms and the wives and the women that were watching me, and

Sarah:

that's how the business grew up, and it really, you could see these pockets of

Sarah:

subscribers, so I would have I remember it vividly, I had like my first subscriber

Sarah:

that wasn't in my town, she was from Colorado Springs, And I was like, I

Sarah:

have a brand new subscriber from another state and I was so excited about it.

Sarah:

And then there were like four subscribers all in the same town.

Sarah:

I'm like, she's sharing this with people.

Sarah:

Like she's telling people where, and then I saw it in Utah.

Sarah:

I saw this little pocket of people in Utah in the same town.

Sarah:

And then it just started to build and build.

Sarah:

And that's when things started to really explode.

Sarah:

But I just kept showing up.

Sarah:

I kept being myself.

Sarah:

I kept just Talking about my products and my subscription boxes and people

Sarah:

got to know me the same way That they did when they walked into my store?

Matt:

Super powerful.

Matt:

Super powerful.

Matt:

And do you just do that on Facebook or is it Facebook and Instagram?

Matt:

Do you stream to multiple places?

Sarah:

Right now it's, I just do that on Facebook because I get

Sarah:

nervous when there's too many things going on and I have the ADHD

Sarah:

and so I just do it on Facebook.

Sarah:

I send the replay out in the email.

Sarah:

Sometimes I'll take snippets and throw them on Instagram reels, but

Sarah:

I just, I'm just a simple person.

Sarah:

I like to focus on one thing and my audience is on Facebook.

Sarah:

If we're going to be 85 percent of my social.

Sarah:

Traffic comes from Facebook.

Sarah:

So I just focus on them.

Sarah:

And if I can repurpose that in any way and get some other views, then I do that too.

Sarah:

But I just focus on what's working

Matt:

Facebook Lives, are you still doing them?

Sarah:

every week.

Sarah:

And right now I've been doing them every day.

Sarah:

Cause it's the 12 days of Christmas.

Sarah:

So I've been live every single day for the last, this is day seven.

Sarah:

We're promoting, we have a special promotion every day for 12 days.

Sarah:

Cause this is December 7th that we are recording this, but I do it.

Sarah:

A couple times a week now.

Sarah:

I also do it for my coaching business now.

Sarah:

It was so successful in my eCommerce business that I do a live every

Sarah:

Monday on my coaching page and it's just, how can I serve them?

Sarah:

It's called Monday Momentum.

Sarah:

How do I get you started on your Monday as a small business owner?

Sarah:

Here's a tip for this week.

Sarah:

Here's an email marketing campaign I want you to send this week.

Sarah:

Here's something I want you to do on your socials this week.

Sarah:

Here's a little tip to get you out of your head, whatever you're struggling with.

Sarah:

Like I just do a little 20 minute kind of pep talk every Monday and

Sarah:

give them one actionable thing to focus on to get them motivated for

Sarah:

the week to work on their businesses.

Matt:

Wow.

Matt:

So you're you're getting right into it then.

Matt:

We're not just once, we're twice a week now we're across multiple things

Matt:

we're doing Facebook all the time.

Matt:

I'm intrigued.

Sarah:

my coaching, I am streaming on YouTube as well, because I do

Sarah:

have an audience there, so I can stream in multiple places at once.

Sarah:

So I stream on, I stream in my paid group, I stream on my free

Sarah:

page, and I stream on YouTube all at the same time on the Mondays.

Matt:

Sound, it sounds Sarah, like you've got a lot going on, right?

Matt:

So what was a simple subscription business?

Matt:

I say simple because you made it complex, but you have this subscription

Matt:

business, which you've then done the expansion stuff for, which has grown

Matt:

that, and you've got a coaching business.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

And you thought, I know what I'll do, I'm not busy enough, so I'm

Matt:

going to write a book, right?

Matt:

And so tell me about the book.

Sarah:

So the book is the book deal happened very unexpectedly.

Sarah:

I didn't, Matt, I didn't say, Oh, I really want to write a book someday.

Sarah:

That's what was on my bucket list.

Sarah:

I'm going to write a book proposal and I'm going to really, I'm

Sarah:

going to try to get a book deal.

Sarah:

That wasn't on my radar at all.

Sarah:

I thought you, you just said it.

Sarah:

I'm busy.

Sarah:

I ain't got time for all that.

Sarah:

But I was at an event where I was speaking and it was a charity event.

Sarah:

And in return for our time to.

Sarah:

We've got a Mastermind Day with each other, and the host of the charity

Sarah:

event facilitated this Mastermind Day.

Sarah:

And the CEO of Hay House Publishing was in that room with me.

Sarah:

And we were, it was my turn for my hot seat.

Sarah:

I'm talking about my business and I'm having to give them a little bit of a

Sarah:

backstory of who I am and what I do so they understand what my question is.

Sarah:

And right on the spot, he offered me a book deal in that meeting.

Sarah:

This is how my little book, One Box at a Time, came to fruition.

Sarah:

So I spent the next year writing my book.

Sarah:

I had to submit a book proposal.

Sarah:

He didn't just give me a book deal, I had to do the work.

Sarah:

But I wrote a book proposal and so I put together, like, All the things, it's a

Sarah:

personal story wrapped into the business strategies and tactics along the way.

Sarah:

So this is how I built my audience.

Sarah:

This is how you're going to do it.

Sarah:

This is how we're work on fulfillment.

Sarah:

This is where the logistics come in.

Sarah:

This is where we started to scale and this is how you're going to do it.

Sarah:

And so every chapter is my journey.

Sarah:

Like you're going to.

Sarah:

You can see my whole business journey along the way in this book but then

Sarah:

every chapter has the strategies that I implemented that I line out for you so

Sarah:

that you can do the exact same thing.

Sarah:

And then also every chapter has one or two stories of my students that

Sarah:

I feature in each chapter of how they did that particular chapter in

Sarah:

a way that is unique and different.

Sarah:

So if you don't see yourself in me, you can probably see

Sarah:

yourself in one of my stories.

Sarah:

We have hundreds of success stories of people that have gone from scratch

Sarah:

to million dollar businesses using my strategies the same way I did,

Sarah:

and I put that all in the book.

Matt:

Fantastic.

Matt:

I'm looking forward to reading it, because it's a fair, it's a fair, it's fair to

Matt:

say it's a fairly New Publish, isn't it?

Sarah:

Less than a month it's been out and we've hit the top Amazon charts for women

Sarah:

in business for, I've hit the entrepreneur number five on the entrepreneur charts.

Sarah:

So we, we've hit some top charts over there and we've got lots

Sarah:

of great reviews on the book.

Sarah:

So I'm really excited.

Matt:

Check it out.

Matt:

One box at a time.

Matt:

So let's dig into some of the contents of the book.

Matt:

Some of the strategies.

Matt:

Chris George was on the podcast.

Matt:

Yeah.

Matt:

Chris from Sub Summit, right?

Matt:

What a legend that man is.

Matt:

He basically said if he was starting out any business in eCommerce,

Matt:

he just wouldn't do eCommerce.

Matt:

He'd just do everything on subscription.

Matt:

Just the way he, just how his brain works.

Matt:

I'm just going to do subscription now, isn't it?

Matt:

I'm I get where he's coming from I'm probably a little bit more hybrid in my

Matt:

thinking, but if I'm thinking of starting like a subscription business you get

Matt:

this question asked a lot, and I'm sure the answer is, I don't know where would

Matt:

someone start if they think, I like the idea of the subscription box model.

Matt:

Where would you start?

Sarah:

I think anyone, whether that's eCommerce or a subscription box model,

Sarah:

they have to start building an audience.

Sarah:

And I think that is probably the most overlooked thing.

Sarah:

We have to start, we, you got to identify who the customer you

Sarah:

want to sell to, no matter if it's one off products or subscription.

Sarah:

And then we have to start building content and building a following for that person.

Sarah:

If you want to start with a subscription box, it's really understanding that person

Sarah:

who that person is so that you can curate.

Sarah:

You have to have a good understanding of what is being made.

Sarah:

It's not about the stuff.

Sarah:

A lot of people going into a subscription box think it's, Oh, if I just get the

Sarah:

best stuff, I'll have the best box.

Sarah:

It's about the experience that you're creating for them.

Sarah:

You can have a box and there's, high name boxes and I'm not

Sarah:

going to call anybody out.

Sarah:

It's full of stuff.

Sarah:

It's full of brand name stuff.

Sarah:

It's so random.

Sarah:

There's no expression.

Sarah:

Experience to go along with it.

Sarah:

And that's our superpower as small business owners.

Sarah:

We have the ability to curate an entire experience every single

Sarah:

month with each box that we have.

Sarah:

It's not about putting random stuff in there.

Sarah:

It's about thinking about what that ideal customer is thinking, feeling, and doing.

Sarah:

Every single month of the year as a mom, as a busy Southern

Sarah:

mom, that is my ideal customer.

Sarah:

What are they thinking, feeling, and doing in the month of January?

Sarah:

I know exactly what they're doing and I can curate a box exactly for that

Sarah:

person so that when they open it, they're like, Sarah made this just for me.

Sarah:

And I get that comment.

Sarah:

So much like Sarah made this just for me.

Sarah:

And that's where you should start.

Sarah:

That's how we have to start our subscription box business off.

Sarah:

Like really understanding who we want to sell to so we can get in their head

Sarah:

and curate an experience for them.

Matt:

Super powerful.

Matt:

It's interesting in your own story, you started, you said you started off

Matt:

with 44 subscribers, so it wasn't like you just blew up overnight, right?

Matt:

It's taking you a few years.

Sarah:

everyone starts from scratch and I didn't have venture capital and I

Sarah:

didn't have investors and I didn't have a trust fund to start a business with.

Sarah:

Like I'm just a regular person and I just thought I can do this.

Sarah:

I want to do this for my customers.

Sarah:

I want them to feel special.

Sarah:

That was the whole premise around starting the subscription box.

Sarah:

How could I make that customer that was coming into my brick and mortar about

Sarah:

once a month, that loyal customer, they would come in and buy something

Sarah:

for themselves or they would come in and buy a gift for somebody else.

Sarah:

How could I make them the VIP of my business?

Sarah:

That loyal customer that I saw on a regular basis, I would

Sarah:

make it exclusive just for them.

Sarah:

I would make it special.

Sarah:

Special.

Sarah:

I would personalize it.

Sarah:

It would feel like a gift for them every single month.

Sarah:

That's what I wanted to curate when I started my subscription box.

Sarah:

And I told you my big goal was to have a hundred subscribers.

Sarah:

And that's why I thought the personalization wasn't a big

Sarah:

deal because I can whip that out.

Sarah:

Little did I know that thousands and thousands of monograms later that I

Sarah:

would be doing this on a larger scale.

Sarah:

And I went through a lot of like ups and downs, figuring that out as I was scaling.

Sarah:

I was scaling very quickly.

Sarah:

I didn't have the equipment to scale that quickly.

Sarah:

I tried outsourcing it for a while and that just became a

Sarah:

disaster after the disaster.

Sarah:

And I thought, okay, I either need to do this.

Sarah:

And do it right and I need to bring it all in house and I need to be able to

Sarah:

control and manage the outcome of this or I need to stop doing the personalization

Sarah:

because it is a train wreck right now.

Sarah:

And so that decision came probably about 800 subscribers in.

Matt:

Okay.

Sarah:

I, and I was literally still the one sitting behind the machine

Sarah:

monogramming for 10 hours a day.

Sarah:

And I thought this is madness.

Sarah:

I cannot keep up doing this.

Sarah:

My, my business was like, my marketing wasn't getting done because I'm

Sarah:

the one running the embroidery.

Sarah:

I was the only one in the building that knew how to run the embroidery machines.

Sarah:

Like I had people doing all the other things, but I hadn't.

Sarah:

Hired someone to do that.

Sarah:

So every month and I would get done and I would be exhausted.

Sarah:

I'm like, crap, I got to start again next week cause we got a hundred more boxes

Sarah:

to get out next week, and so it was just like, alright, I got to figure this out.

Sarah:

Tried outsourcing it.

Sarah:

That was a disaster.

Sarah:

And I said, okay, if we're going to continue to personalize.

Sarah:

We have to do it right.

Sarah:

I don't want this janky personalization that was happening by outsourcing it.

Sarah:

And so I bought the equipment, I hired the people, we moved into the

Sarah:

warehouse, we had the space to have all the equipment that we needed.

Sarah:

It was a big investment, but it was either I was gonna continue to scale

Sarah:

to pay for that investment or I was gonna need to pull back the option.

Sarah:

And I made the decision to scale and that's when we hit 1, 500, 3, 000.

Sarah:

That's when we started to really go.

Sarah:

And as we continue to grow, we continue to buy more machines and

Sarah:

we continue to train more people to run the machines and we continue to

Sarah:

personalize in more ways than embroidery.

Sarah:

We, we do printing, we do Engraving, we do embroidery.

Sarah:

So any different month there might be, something different in your box.

Sarah:

It's not always embroidered, like we might do embroidery this month and then we're

Sarah:

going to move to DTF printing next month and we're going to have that on an item in

Sarah:

it, and so it's different ways that we're.

Sarah:

Now able to monogram items because of the decision to scale and it's

Sarah:

profitable and we have it all in house now, so we have the control over it.

Matt:

Which is incredible, really.

Matt:

And I'm listening to you talk and I'm thinking part of me thinks

Matt:

actually having a warehouse full of all those machines will just be fun.

Matt:

It just sounds like there's a lot of fun.

Matt:

Sounds like it's very hard work at times, and I'm sure it is.

Matt:

But it sounds like actually you.

Matt:

It comes across in your voice, Sarah, that actually you're you

Matt:

deeply care about this business.

Matt:

You're obviously, very passionate about it.

Matt:

And I think that's probably the secret in a lot of ways to the success.

Matt:

It's nice all the other trips and, and stuff that we can do in

Matt:

scaling, but I think if you've not got that passion, I don't know

Matt:

how you do it for the long haul.

Matt:

I I think you give up quick, right?

Sarah:

You do.

Sarah:

And that's what I tell a lot of my students, Matt, because when they're

Sarah:

picking something, when they're picking their niche or they're picking

Sarah:

their customer base and they're just getting started, I tell them, I

Sarah:

need you to be passionate about it.

Sarah:

I need you to be able to talk about it every day.

Sarah:

I need you to get excited.

Sarah:

Excited about it because if not this E-commerce rat race that we're on is a

Sarah:

roller coaster, and if we don't love what we do, we're gonna burn out really fast.

Sarah:

There are gonna be hard days and you're like, why am I even doing this?

Sarah:

I don't even like what I'm doing.

Sarah:

We have to love what I we're doing.

Sarah:

We have to love the customer that we're serving.

Sarah:

It's not transactional.

Sarah:

I know that a lot of our brains.

Sarah:

Think of things as transactional because we want to be profitable.

Sarah:

We want to make money.

Sarah:

That's why we're doing this.

Sarah:

We're not doing this for fun.

Sarah:

I'm not out here packing 3000 boxes a day for fun.

Sarah:

I'm doing it because it's building my livelihood, but I also deeply

Sarah:

care about my customers and I deeply care about the outcome of

Sarah:

this box that goes out every month.

Sarah:

And if we don't have that passion behind what we're doing, Our business

Sarah:

won't be long term like to I'm about to be 11 years old in business, okay?

Sarah:

And in small business years, that's like dog years.

Sarah:

Like I feel like I'm You know what I mean?

Sarah:

Like one small business year is like dog years because so many businesses

Sarah:

don't make it to the one year mark.

Sarah:

So many businesses don't make it five year mark to make it to 10 years

Sarah:

of being a small business owners.

Sarah:

That's a big feat.

Sarah:

That's 27 dog years for me.

Sarah:

And I feel every one of those.

Matt:

I feel them to my bones, man.

Matt:

No I've been in business since 1998 yeah I definitely am feeling them.

Matt:

Let's go back a little bit Sarah, if I can, and just pick

Matt:

up on the, on this idea, right?

Matt:

Where you start is you build an audience, right?

Matt:

This is what you do.

Matt:

How do you.

Matt:

What are some of the things, I mean you've talked about doing Facebook lives, but

Matt:

what are some of the things that people should be thinking about if they, and in

Matt:

a lot of ways I'm quite fortunate because if I started something for a niche, we've

Matt:

got probably that niche, I've got, a hundred thousand emails, I've got that

Matt:

audience to start something in if I'm not already doing that subscription business,

Matt:

but let's assume I haven't, right?

Matt:

And I'm starting with very relatively minor skills.

Matt:

What's your advice?

Sarah:

So we got to build our following and we've got to build our list.

Sarah:

And those are the two places that we really have to hone in on.

Sarah:

And we do that by serving before we sell.

Sarah:

Okay.

Sarah:

So that's, Something that I teach a lot.

Sarah:

We've got to serve our audience before we ask them to buy something from us.

Sarah:

And that's how we create these really loyal customers.

Sarah:

So in what way can you serve your audience?

Sarah:

So if I think about somebody wanting to start something in a

Sarah:

pet industry what pet is that?

Sarah:

Like we have a amazing box in our community.

Sarah:

It's a guinea pig box.

Sarah:

And she has tons of subscribers, but it's for guinea pigs.

Sarah:

So how could you serve the guinea pig community?

Sarah:

For you show up and start selling them a subscription box.

Sarah:

It's like, how often should I clean my guinea pig cage?

Sarah:

What does it mean when my guinea pig's not eating?

Sarah:

Like, how are we going to serve these people so they'll start to follow us?

Sarah:

And so that's what we have to put out first.

Sarah:

It's that content that gets us noted.

Sarah:

As the guinea pig expert, right?

Sarah:

So that could be some opt ins.

Sarah:

That's going to be building our list.

Sarah:

That could be, your 10 point checklist on how to care for your guinea pigs.

Sarah:

Okay.

Sarah:

That's a great opt in.

Sarah:

We know everyone opting into that is a guinea pig owner, and then we're

Sarah:

going to sell them a guinea pig box.

Sarah:

Okay.

Sarah:

So it's finding that niche and then how can you serve that niche?

Sarah:

Okay.

Sarah:

And so for me, I have more of a.

Sarah:

Want based subscription.

Sarah:

It's just fun.

Sarah:

It's just cute.

Sarah:

It's just pretty.

Sarah:

Like it's just a girly thing.

Sarah:

So one opt in that works really well for me and my business are phone wallpapers.

Sarah:

And Matt, if you're not familiar with it, it's just this cute little

Sarah:

design that's on your phone screen.

Sarah:

And I make them their, that's my t shirt design for the month.

Sarah:

So if they like this little wallpaper enough to give me their email address

Sarah:

so they can download it to their phone for free, they're probably gonna like

Sarah:

my t shirt design because it's the exact same design that's on my t shirt.

Sarah:

And now I can sell them into my t shirt subscription through an automation.

Sarah:

So I'm building the list first, I'm building my following.

Sarah:

And the ways that we can build our following is publishing

Sarah:

content that's serving.

Sarah:

I also love to do page like ads.

Sarah:

Those build a following really well.

Sarah:

We can typically get a page like for under 50 cents right now.

Sarah:

So if you could start to build, a thousand followers from a page like

Sarah:

ad right in the beginning stage of your business, then you're going

Sarah:

to have somebody to market to.

Sarah:

That's one of the biggest issues we have as small business owners is we get ready,

Sarah:

we built this great subscription box.

Sarah:

It's going to be wonderful, but we don't have anybody to sell it to

Sarah:

because we haven't built our list and we haven't built our following.

Sarah:

But a page like ad could just be me.

Sarah:

We got to have that connection point.

Sarah:

I want to see your face.

Sarah:

That's our superpower with small businesses.

Sarah:

We're not a brand, we're a person.

Sarah:

And I could be wearing a monogrammed pullover, have my monogram on it.

Sarah:

And I could have a bag that has my monogram on it, on my arm.

Sarah:

Okay.

Sarah:

So this is what I do.

Sarah:

If you like the fact that I have monograms on my outfit.

Sarah:

You're going to stop your scroll and you're going to read

Sarah:

my page like, Hey, I'm Sarah.

Sarah:

I'm from a small town in Texas.

Sarah:

I'm a mom of two teenagers.

Sarah:

I love tacos and margaritas.

Sarah:

And around here, we personalize everything.

Sarah:

If it's not moving, we monogram it.

Sarah:

And if somebody Love is a monogram.

Sarah:

They're going to like what I'm wearing or holding and they're and it's a

Sarah:

page like ad, so it has the button, the little thumb buttons on Facebook

Sarah:

so I can instantly like her page.

Sarah:

Now they're going to start to see my content.

Sarah:

Now that hopefully they're going to start to interact with me.

Sarah:

Now when I go live, I have someone new that I can get to know and trust me.

Sarah:

And that's how I'm continuing to build my audience.

Sarah:

And that's how you can do it in the beginning.

Sarah:

And I still run a page like ad every single month of all year long.

Sarah:

I run a page like to cold audiences because I have to

Sarah:

continue to grow my following.

Sarah:

I have to continue to grow my list, or I'm going to keep showing up and selling to

Sarah:

the exact same person every single month.

Sarah:

And I'm never going to grow.

Sarah:

I'm going to have cancellations every month in my subscription.

Sarah:

It's a guarantee.

Sarah:

It is a guarantee.

Sarah:

If I don't go after a new audience every month, that number is going

Sarah:

to dwindle and dwindle because I don't have anyone new to sell to.

Sarah:

And so we have to do that every single month as eCommerce businesses.

Matt:

I love that.

Matt:

You know what you remind me of, Sari, as you were talking there is

Matt:

do you remember at Sub Summit 2023?

Matt:

Going back in time, all that distance in our memories Neil,

Matt:

did you hear Neil Hoyne speak?

Matt:

The Google strategist guy?

Matt:

He was one of the main speakers at the, on the stage and I, he's

Matt:

been on the podcast, actually, as we speak, his episode is out live.

Matt:

Really fascinating chap.

Matt:

And he was talking about, data and Google strategy and all this sort of stuff.

Matt:

And it was fascinating.

Matt:

And he was talking about the personas that marketing people have which

Matt:

I thought was really fascinating.

Matt:

So the actual marketers themselves have these sort of personas.

Matt:

And the first one he talked about, Was the bar persona and the bar persona.

Matt:

He said, picture the scene.

Matt:

There's a chap obviously my language here, he's not English.

Matt:

There's a chap walks into a bar and he basically goes up to

Matt:

every woman in the bar and says you marry me just straight away.

Matt:

And of course most of 'em are gonna say no.

Matt:

And he said, this is what.

Matt:

The Bar Persona marketer is they just literally, they show up and they're

Matt:

like, buy my stuff straight away.

Matt:

There's no courtship.

Matt:

There's no there's no drawing you in.

Matt:

And I thought it was a really good analogy of what we try and

Matt:

do sometimes with our marketing.

Matt:

It's just here, boom, buy it.

Matt:

Rather than, hey, let's get to know each other a little bit.

Matt:

Which is what he talked about.

Matt:

And so this is why.

Matt:

Your page like strategy and just delivering value to people before

Matt:

serve them before you sell them I think is a really good thing.

Matt:

Are you all right there?

Matt:

Yeah, you seem to be coughing a

Sarah:

I'm trying not to cough on the podcast.

Matt:

The trouble is the more you hold it in the worse it gets right

Sarah:

Exactly.

Sarah:

Exactly.

Matt:

Been there.

Matt:

So yes, sorry all of that said It just connects me back to what Neil

Matt:

Horne was talking about And so you're still doing the same strategy.

Sarah:

This point in my business, it works.

Sarah:

And this is what I think as we get, Later in business, as we get more established,

Sarah:

more polished in business, we think we have to keep jumping through hoops

Sarah:

and trying all these new fun things.

Sarah:

But when we just go back to the basics, what built our business and just

Sarah:

re energize them, the basics work.

Sarah:

We just have to keep working them.

Matt:

do you let's say I am going to do a subscription box where my key

Matt:

target audience is probably more, say, Instagram based rather than

Matt:

Facebook based, are you still doing the page like ads because Facebook is

Matt:

so big that at least some part of your audience will be on Facebook or are

Matt:

you doing something entirely different?

Sarah:

think if you are focused only on Instagram, you're leaving

Sarah:

money on the table with Facebook.

Sarah:

And I can see it with my own students.

Sarah:

Some of them are very big on Instagram and it's very different from the way I am

Sarah:

because my audience is mostly on Facebook.

Sarah:

But when I challenge them to lean into Facebook a little bit more,

Sarah:

they are amazed at the result.

Sarah:

Because they've focused on Instagram so much, they didn't see Facebook

Sarah:

as being viable, and they didn't see their audience being viable.

Sarah:

But what's happening is, they've missed a whole section of people

Sarah:

that now they're tapping into.

Sarah:

And it's incredible to see their results on Facebook when their Instagram

Sarah:

could have 30, 000 followers and their Facebook could have 300 followers because

Sarah:

they don't put any attention to it.

Sarah:

And when I challenged them for a month, focus on Facebook for a month, and they're

Sarah:

getting, they're going live on Facebook and they're getting sales instantly.

Sarah:

They're shocked by it so I would tell our Instagrammers not to count

Sarah:

Facebook out because it's still very viable for a lot of businesses.

Matt:

Yeah, I love that.

Matt:

I still see whenever we do live streams, we're with YouTube.

Matt:

We have a different company that does podcast productions.

Matt:

And so we see the live streams going out, whether it's Facebook

Matt:

YouTube, even Instagram lives in a lot of ways, by far the most

Matt:

engagement you get is on Facebook.

Matt:

It's really quite fascinating, even still today, the comments, because you can reply

Matt:

under comments and that can start little conversations, you can't really do that

Matt:

on YouTube, it's just all very linear it's still, and the ability to instantly

Matt:

share that live onto your Facebook feed.

Matt:

Without really thinking about it.

Matt:

Whereas if I want to show you a YouTube live stream where am I sharing that to?

Matt:

I now have to open up Facebook to share it because it's, do you see what I mean?

Matt:

There's no feed to share it to.

Matt:

And so all these things means to me, like Facebook's not going away

Matt:

and the engagement still, it's still out does everything else, and we've

Matt:

tried them all and it just fascinates me that it's it's just there.

Matt:

It's just not going anywhere.

Matt:

Is it?

Matt:

It intrigues me.

Sarah:

Yeah.

Sarah:

And people are like Facebook is dead.

Sarah:

If Facebook's dead, it's cause you're not using it.

Sarah:

And that's what I, that's what I tell them because Facebook is very much still.

Sarah:

And if you look at Facebook users right now, they're the ones that have the money.

Sarah:

They're in that age range where they have expendable income.

Sarah:

They have they have the extra income to spend on the things, the luxury

Sarah:

items or the additional items, the, not the needs, but the wants.

Sarah:

And so you're not tapping into that audience you're leaving

Sarah:

a lot of money on the table.

Matt:

Brilliant.

Matt:

So the strategy then is simple, isn't it?

Matt:

Grow your audience don't count out Facebook, have a look on Facebook,

Matt:

serve your audience, deliver content, be constant, show up, do the live streams,

Matt:

even if you really don't want to do the live streams and someone always says to me

Matt:

whenever I say this about live shopping, I'm actually I'm going to ask you,

Matt:

Sarah, because I get this asked a lot, but I've only got one, one, two, three,

Matt:

four products, a handful of products.

Matt:

It's not like I can turn up to every live stream and do something

Matt:

different or model some new clothing.

Matt:

How would you respond to that?

Sarah:

would respond with, you've got to make it entertainment.

Sarah:

Okay.

Sarah:

So if you only have a handful of products and those are your core products and

Sarah:

that's what you sell all the time, you've got to show benefits of these.

Sarah:

You've got to show different ways people are using your products.

Sarah:

You also just need to give some entertainment factor.

Sarah:

It's not always about buy buy, but it's like, What are you doing for the day?

Sarah:

What are you into?

Sarah:

You could be making something in your kitchen.

Sarah:

If you're, if your audience is a woman of my age, which my audience is,

Sarah:

they're going to watch me put together broccoli soup in my crock pot today.

Sarah:

And that's an entertainment factor for them.

Sarah:

That's why people are on social media.

Sarah:

They're not on social media to buy.

Sarah:

They're on social media for entertainment.

Sarah:

So if you don't have anything that, if you feel like you've, All four of your

Sarah:

products this week do something different.

Sarah:

Maybe you're using something in your everyday life that is your product and

Sarah:

you can show them how you're using it.

Sarah:

You're not selling them anything.

Sarah:

You're just.

Sarah:

You're just serving them.

Sarah:

Who's your customer?

Sarah:

My customer needs a crockpot meal for tonight because they got kids

Sarah:

to feed and they've been working all day and they are tired.

Sarah:

They're gonna tune in and they're gonna see what I'm cooking in the

Sarah:

kitchen and they're gonna relate to me.

Sarah:

And then when they see that cute monogram bag in their feed from one

Sarah:

of my ads or one of my posts, they're gonna be like, oh, yeah, I love Sarah's

Sarah:

stuff because I'm a person to them.

Sarah:

So don't worry so much about live selling all the time.

Sarah:

How can we be entertaining to people in our audience and how

Sarah:

could we attract more people?

Sarah:

If someone then shares my broccoli soup that I'm making in the crock

Sarah:

pot on their Facebook feed, I'm sure other moms are going to go look at

Sarah:

that and I might have a potential of having a new customer see my stuff.

Sarah:

So you don't have to worry about having these perfectly polished branded

Sarah:

Instagram pages and Facebook pages.

Sarah:

We just want to be real.

Sarah:

Like people just want to engage with real people.

Sarah:

They want to be entertained.

Sarah:

They want to be lifted up.

Sarah:

They want to feel like they're part of something bigger than themselves.

Sarah:

That's all social media is.

Matt:

Yeah, that's super powerful.

Matt:

It's why I love podcasting.

Matt:

And I because it's easy content creation.

Matt:

I'm not going to lie.

Matt:

If I think about the last 45 minutes to an hour.

Matt:

We've been going.

Matt:

I've not had to think about anything.

Matt:

It's all, I'm just asking you questions and picking your brain, right?

Matt:

It's none of this has come from me.

Matt:

Which is, so it makes it easy.

Matt:

It's a wonderful conversation.

Matt:

It's entertaining.

Matt:

People get drawn in.

Matt:

And we constantly show up and now we have thousands of people listening to

Matt:

the podcast, which is just brilliant.

Matt:

I definitely don't take it for granted.

Sarah:

Is how you are serving your audience, right?

Sarah:

You're serving your audience in this way before you ever ask

Sarah:

them to buy any of your products.

Sarah:

You are teaching them who you are.

Sarah:

You are letting them know and trust you by your inflections in your voice

Sarah:

or the jokes that you may, they're getting to know your personality.

Sarah:

This is your live, right?

Sarah:

So the people watching you on video as we're recording this podcast

Sarah:

and the people listening in their earbuds, they're hearing our voice.

Sarah:

which is so personal.

Sarah:

They're getting to know us on that level because we're just normal people.

Sarah:

We're just talking about the things we talk about.

Sarah:

And that's how you're building your audience and you're serving your audience.

Matt:

true.

Matt:

And actually, 75 percent of people that listen to podcasts are either in

Matt:

the car or they're walking the dog.

Matt:

You're in very personal space when they're engaging with what you're saying.

Matt:

Which makes it quite an extraordinary medium, but anyway, Sarah, listen,

Matt:

I'm very aware of the time and you've been super generous so far.

Matt:

If people want to reach out to you, if they want to connect with you,

Matt:

find out more about your book, your course, your coaching, where do we go?

Matt:

Fantastic.

Sarah:

Just come over to launchyourbox.

Sarah:

com.

Sarah:

Super easy to remember as you're walking the dog, launchyourbox.

Sarah:

com.

Sarah:

You will find everything that I do over there.

Sarah:

You can follow me on the socials.

Sarah:

I go live every Monday for a good little business pep talk if you need

Sarah:

that in your ear on Monday morning.

Sarah:

And I have a wonderful podcast as well.

Sarah:

I show up every week and deliver great content, strategies, tactics, and some

Sarah:

great interviews with my students.

Sarah:

And that's the Launch Your Box podcast as well.

Matt:

podcast.

Matt:

I'm a subscriber.

Matt:

I do listen to it.

Matt:

Fascinating some of the stuff that comes out.

Matt:

I'm like, Ooh, I take some notes which is great.

Matt:

So do check it out.

Matt:

LaunchYourBox.

Matt:

com is the website to go to.

Matt:

We will of course link to all of that in the show notes which you can get

Matt:

along for free with transcripts on the website, or it's come into your email.

Matt:

If you've already signed up, listen, Sarah, I thank you so

Matt:

much for coming on the show.

Matt:

Super grateful.

Matt:

Love the conversation.

Matt:

Do you know what I loved?

Matt:

Your passion, and I love the simplicity of the message.

Matt:

It's not complex what you're talking about.

Matt:

You've just gotta graft a little bit.

Matt:

I dunno if that translate actually that translate across.

Matt:

It's gotta work a little bit, hustle a little bit.

Matt:

Be passionate, show up, be consistent.

Matt:

But I love the simplicity of your message and love what you're doing.

Matt:

Thank you for just being so awesome today and bringing all that to our audience.

Sarah:

Thank you for having me.

Sarah:

I enjoyed it.

Sarah:

I could, we could talk about this all day long,

Sarah:

couldn't we?

Matt:

I feel like we're just getting warmed up, if I'm honest with you.

Matt:

So many more questions, but no, it's fantastic.

Matt:

Also a big shout out to today's show sponsor, the eCommerce Cohort.

Matt:

Remember to check out that membership group, ecommercecohort.

Matt:

com, you're going to want to be in it.

Matt:

Because I'm in it.

Matt:

So why would you not be in it?

Matt:

It's just, it's the way it is.

Matt:

Also, be sure to follow the eCommerce Podcast wherever you get your

Matt:

podcasts from, because we've got some more great conversations lined up.

Matt:

I don't want you to miss any of them.

Matt:

And in case no one has told you yet today, let me be the first.

Matt:

You are awesome.

Matt:

Yes, you are.

Matt:

Created awesome.

Matt:

It's just a burden you have to bear.

Matt:

Sarah has to bear it.

Matt:

I've got to bear it.

Matt:

You've got to bear it as well.

Matt:

Now, the eCommerce Podcast is produced by Aurion Media.

Matt:

You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.

Matt:

The team that makes this show possible is the beautiful, amazing,

Matt:

talented Sadaf Beynon and equally beautiful, talented Tanya Hutsuliak.

Matt:

Theme song was written by Josh Edmundson.

Matt:

And as I mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or show

Matt:

notes, head over to the website.

Matt:

You know it by now, eCommercePodcast.

Matt:

com.

Matt:

That's it from me, that's it from Sarah, thank you so much for

Matt:

joining us, have a fantastic week, wherever you are in the world, I'll

Matt:

see you next time, bye for now.